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Download Lecture 8: Igneous Petrogenesis
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Lecture 8: Igneous Petrogenesis • Igneous • Phase relations • Mantle • Trace rock classification melting element geochemistry >70% of Earth’s annual volcanic budget is erupted in the oceans. Igneous Rock Classification: Texture •The first distinction is between volcanic and plutonic rocks. – Volcanic rocks are erupted at the Earth’s surface and cool very quickly. There is insufficient time to grow large crystals. This leads to formation of glass or very fine-grained rocks, or to phenocrysts (crystals that grew before eruption) in a fine groundmass. – Plutonic rocks crystallize at some depth, and therefore lose heat relatively slowly. Crystals have time to grow after nucleation, and the resulting rocks generally have individual crystals large enough to see unaided. – Rocks of exactly the same composition and mineralogy get different names in their volcanic and plutonic forms, because they look different. Basalt Gabbro 5 mm 5 mm Aphanitic: mineral grains or groundmass that are smaller than 1 mm (need microscope or hand lens to see). Porphyritic: larger mineral grains within an aphanitic or phaneritic matrix. Phaneritic: mineral grains easily seen with naked eye >3 mm. Mineral groups 1) Silicates (SiO4) – make up 96% of minerals, e.g., olivine 2) Carbonates (CO3): e.g, calcite CaCO3 3) Oxides: metal and oxygen (e.g., hematite, magnetite) 4) Sulfides: element + S2 (pyrite – FeS) 5) Sulfates: element + SO4 (gypsum – CaSO4 2H2O) 6) Halides: element + halide (salt - NaCl) 7) Native elements: e.g., Cu, Au, Ag Key minerals in mafic igneous rocks: • Olivine: (Mg,Fe)2SiO4 -- Forsterite (Mg), Fayalite (Fe) Pyroxene: (Mg,Fe,Ca)2Si2O6 -- Mg-, Fe-, Ca-, (Clinopyroxene); Na-, Al- (Orthopyroxene) • Feldspar: (K,Na,Ca)AlSi3O8 -- Albite (Na-) ,Anorthite (Ca-), Plagioclase (Na+Ca), Alkali (K-) gypsum • Igneous Rock Classification: Mineralogy • The standard classification scheme uses the mineralogy of the rock (how much quartz, how much plagioclase, etc.) – There is one important twist…for volcanic rocks you usually cannot measure the actual minerals present (or it may be a glass and there are no minerals present). – In this case, instead of the actual minerals, you classify based on normative mineralogy • The norm is a calculation based on the bulk composition of a volcanic rock, for what minerals would be present if it were fully crystallized. • The standard norm calculation is called the CIPW norm, after Cross, Iddings, Pirsson, and Washington (1902). Quartz: SiO2 Orthoclase: KAlSi3O8 Plagioclase: NaAlSi3O8 Feldspathoid: feldspar with Al:Si = 1. peridotite pyroxenite Dunite Lherzolite Pyroxenite Wt.% Al2O3 1. Ophiolites 2. Dredge samples from oceanic fracture zones 3. Xenoliths in basalts 4. Kimberlites Tholeiitic basalt 15 l tia r Pa ing % lt 20 Me 10 5 Lherzolite 0 0.0 Harzburgite Residuum Dunite 0.2 Dunite 0.4 Wt.% TiO2 0.6 0.8 Lherzolite Pyroxenite Other igneous rock classifications •By silica percentage: %SiO2 Designation %Dark Minerals Designation Examples >66 Acid <40 Felsic Granite, rhyolite 52-66 Intermediate 40-70 Intermediate Diorite, andesite 45-52 Basic 70-90 Mafic Gabbro, basalt <45 Ultrabasic >90 Ultramafic Dunite, komatiite By alumina saturation (which dark minerals show up): Chemistry Designation %Dark Minerals Peraluminous Muscovite, biotite, topaz, corundum, garnet, tourmaline Na2O+K2O+CaO>Al2O3 & Al2O3 > Na2O+K2O Metaluminous Melilite, biotite, pyroxene, hornblende, epidote Al2O3 ~ Na2O+K2O Subaluminous Olivine, pyroxenes Al2O3 < Na2O + K2O Peralkaline Sodic pyroxenes & amphiboles Al2O3>Na2O+K2O+CaO Total alkalis + silica (TAS) classification Basalt Rhyolite Geodynamic setting of igneous rocks • Igneous rocks are formed today at plate margins or in continental or oceanic plate interiors (but most of the action is at plate boundaries). Mantle melting terminology Geotherm – Vertical temperature profile in the earth Solidus – Temperature at which a rock will first start to melt Liquidus – Temperature at which a rock will be fully molten. Adiabat – A packet of the mantle that moves up/down without gaining or losing heat. Another explanation of the adiabat Imagine the Earth with its present distribution of material but without gravity. The material is uncompressed and there is no pressure increase with depth. Set the initial temperature everywhere to the Earth's surface temperature. Now turn gravity back on. The gravitational pressure causes the material to contract, with material compressing more at greater depths because of the greater pressure. The temperature will also increase because of the compression. If this is done such that no heat is gained or lost by any given piece of the material, the temperature increase for any parcel of matter will be adiabatic, and the temperature increase with depth will thus be adiabatic. Temperature Depth No gravity, isothermal Gravity turned on, adiabatic Another explanation of the adiabat Another way to achieve an approximate adiabatic temperature distribution is to have material convect heat from the hotter interior to the cooler exterior. The heat is carried upwards by the upwards movement or flow of material, while material cooled near the surface descends. If the temperature gradient (increase of temperature with depth) is adiabatic, then upwards movement of a parcel of material will not result in a temperature difference of the parcel with respect to the surrounding material. However, if the temperature gradient is greater than adiabatic (super-adiabatic), the temperature of an upwards moving parcel will only decrease by the adiabatic gradient, and so will be greater than that of its surroundings. Temp. excess of parcel at shallower depth Depth In situ geotherm (super-adiabatic temperature gradient) Adiabatic gradient Upward movement of material along adiabatic gradient Mantle Plumes Mantle melts between ~1300-1800ºC due to: • Increase in temperature • Decrease in pressure • Addition of volatile phases Mid-Ocean Ridges (and Plumes) Mantle melts between ~1300-1800ºC due to: • Increase in temperature • Decrease in pressure • Addition of volatile phases Subduction Zones Mantle melts between ~1300-1800ºC due to: • Increase in temperature • Decrease in pressure • Addition of volatile phases Percentage of melting (F) The pressure (or depth) versus temperature (P-T) path of upwelling mantle beneath a mid-ocean ridge leads to a maximum of ~25% melt. Phase Diagrams A phase diagram is common way to represent the system state at specific pressure (P) and temperature (T) conditions. Lines on the diagram represent conditions under which a phase change is at equilibrium. At a point on a line, it is possible for two or more phases to coexist at equilibrium. In other regions, only one phase exists at equilibrium. Phase diagram for water Triple point: where 3 phases coexist Phase diagram for Olivine solid solution Forsterite (Fo) Fayallite (Fa) Solidus: the temperature below which the substance is stable in the solid state Liquidus: the temperature above which the substance is stable in the liquid state Lever Rule: to determine quantitatively the relative composition of a mixture in a two-phase region in a phase diagram Equilibrium Melting Equilibrium melting occurs when the solid and liquid phases are kept together as melting progresses. Lever Rule S – solid composition L – liquid composition A – system composition We can write fraction x of solid as xS + (1-x)L = A which can also be written as x (A –S) = (1-x)(L-A) We can solve the above equations to get the proportion of solid x = (A – L) / (S – L) Fractional Melting Fractional melting occurs if the liquid is immediately removed from the solid as the solid melts. Equilibrium Solidification Equilibrium solidification occurs when the solid and liquid phases are kept together as solidifications progresses. Fractional Solidification Fractional solidification occurs if the solid is immediately removed from the liquid as it crystallizes. Diopside (Clinopyroxene) – Anorthite (Plagioclase) Diopside (CaMgSi2O6) Dark mineral Gabbro (coarse grained equivalent of basalt) – Oceanic Crust Anorthite (CaAl2Si2O8) Light mineral Diopside-Anorthite phase diagram 1600 liquidus Liquid Temperature, ˚ C 1500 eutectic 1400 An + liquid Di + liquid 1300 1200 CaMgSi206 (Diopside) solidus Diopside + Anorthite 20 40 60 Anorthite content, mol% 80 CaAl2Si208 (Anorthite) Eutectic: mixture that has the lowest freezing point (composition/ temperature of the last solids formed when freezing, first melt formed) Diopside-Anorthite phase diagram 1600 liquidus Liquid Temperature, ˚ C 1500 eutectic 1400 An + liquid Di + liquid 1300 1200 CaMgSi206 (Diopside) batch melting solidus Diopside + Anorthite 20 40 60 Anorthite content, mol% 80 CaAl2Si208 (Anorthite) Diopside-Anorthite phase diagram 1600 liquidus Liquid Temperature, ˚ C 1500 eutectic 1400 An + liquid Di + liquid 1300 1200 CaMgSi206 (Diopside) fractional melting solidus Diopside + Anorthite 20 40 60 Anorthite content, mol% 80 CaAl2Si208 (Anorthite) Back to mantle How melting does melting occur in the mantle? OL OL Gar Cpx Gar Opx OL OL Olivine G O Cpx OL Incr. melt C OL G O OL Opx OL OL O C OL O OL Melting of garnet lherzolite begins at As the extent of melting increa cpx-cpx-garnet triple junctions in melt migrates along grain boun Melting to of agarnet lherzolite begins at opx-cpx-garnet response reduction in pressure. forming an triple inter-connected ne junctions (eutectic) to a reduction pressure. Olivine is Olivine is not involvedininresponse melting at that in allows the melt to segrega notstages. involved in melting at early stages. As the the unmelted extent of melting (F) early crystal residue. increases, melt migrates along grain boundaries forming an interconnected network that allows the melt to segregate from the Composition of melt depends on the P and T (which controls the extent of unmelted crystal residue. and the phases involved in the melting. Suppose that ~1/3 (opx) + ~1/3 (cpx Wenlu Zhu Melting of garnet lherzolite begins at opx-cpx-garnet triple junctions (eutectic) in response to a reduction in pressure. Olivine is not involved in melting at early stages. As the extent of melting (F) increases, melt migrates along grain boundaries forming an interconnected network that allows the melt to segregate from the unmelted crystal residue. Trace elements in mantle melting • Incompatible elements: preferentially partition into the melt phase (D<1) • Compatible elements: preferentially partition into the solid phase (D>1) • Partition or distribution coefficient (D) = Csolid/Cliquid Concentrations normalized to bulk earth, C1 chondrites, or primitive mantle Most incompatible Less incompatible Partition coefficients Partition coefficients are determined for an element between a unique mineral phase in a unique lattice site and melt, and are determined by three primary factors… • Size (ionic radius) is fairly intuitive control, since the substituting ion needs to fit into a mineral lattice: Too big or too small a won't be energetically stable. • Charge (ionic charge) is also intuitive, since charge must be balance within a lattice and if a charge imbalance is generated by a substitution, a second substitution must occur to correct for this. • Electronegativity is harder to visualize, but the disruption to the mineral lattice of replacing a greedy element with a giving element or vice versa is too much for a lattice to take. Partition coefficients Rock Type Mineral Z Elem Value Basalt Garnet 41 Nb Basalt Garnet 41 Nb 0.01 Basalt Ilmenite 41 Nb 0.8 Basalt 41 Nb 0.003 Basalt Low Calcium Pyroxene Magnetite 41 Nb Basalt Olivine 41 Nb Basalt Plagioclase 41 Nb Basalt Plagioclase 41 Basalt Plagioclase Basalt Kd Type Reference Experimental Jenner et al. 1994 Phenocryst-Matrix, Experimental Experimental Keleman & Dunn 1992 McCallum & Charette 1978 Phenocryst-Matrix, Experimental Calculated Keleman & Dunn 1992 0.01 Calculated McKenzie & O'Nions 1991 0.01 Calculated McKenzie & O'Nions 1991 Nb Experimental McCallum & Charette 1978 41 Nb Experimental Bindeman et al. 1998 Plagioclase 41 Nb Experimental Aignertorres et al. 2007 Basalt Rutile 41 Nb 16 Experimental McCallum & Charette 1978 Basalt Rutile 41 Nb 136 Experimental Foley et al. 2000 http://earthref.org/KDD/ Nielsen 1992 Trace Elements in mantle melting • Incompatible elements: preferentially partition into the melt phase (D<1) • Compatible elements: preferentially partition into the solid phase (D>1) • Partition or distribution coefficient (D) = Csolid/Cliquid Melts Cmelt/Co 10 Relating trace element concentrations to melt fraction (F) batch (equilibrium) melting D=0.01 0.1 0.5 1 1 C-T Lee 5 !!"#$ 1 = ! ! !! + ! 1 − !! !!"# Equilibrium Melting 10 0.1 0 100 !!"# !! ! 0.6 0.8 !0.2 = 0.4 !!"# !! + ! 1 − !! 100 Solids Melts Cmelt/Co 1 10 10 D=0.01 Csolid/C !!"# o 0.1 !!"#$ 1 = ! ! !!0.5+ ! 1 − !! !!"# 1 ! !!"# 10 5 !! ! !! + ! 1 − !! 1 =1 0.5 1 0.1 0.1 5 0.1 0 100 10 0.01 10 0.01 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1 F 0 0.2 F 0.4 0.6 0.8 1 F FIGURE 7.3. Equilibrium Melting. Solids before the melt can separate from the solid residue. The critical melt fraction 10 elt Melt Fraction 10 Relating trace element concentrations to melt 5fraction (F) Cmelt/Co 0.5 10 fractional melting 0.1 1 1 C-T Lee D=0.01 !!"#$ 1 ! ! ! !! = 1 − ! ! ! !! !Fractional !"# Melting 100 ! ! /C !"# o 0.001 0 1 1 = ! !! + ! 1 − !! !!"# 0.5 /C Csolid o 100 10 0.2 0.6 0.8 1 10 !! =1 ! !! + ! 1 − !! 5 1 0.5 0.1 0.01 D=0.01 0.001 0 0.4 ! 0.1 0.1 0.01 ! !!"# 0.2 ! ! ! !! 10 ! !!"# 10 0.1 = 1−! Solid 1 5 !!"# 100 Instantaneous Melt Fraction 10 !!"#$ 0.1 0.01 0.01 0.4 F 0.6 0.8 Solid 1 0.001 0 0.2 0.6 0.8 F 100 Aggregate Melt 10 5 0.4 0.01 1 10 Melt Fraction 10 10 5 1 Relating trace element concentrations to melt fraction (F) 5 0.5 Cmelt/Co id/Co 0.5 10 0.1 fractional melting 0.1 elt 1 0.1 0.01 !!"#$ 1 − 1 − ! ! = 0.4 ! 0.2 ! 0.6 !!"# !! D=0.01 ! 0.8 0.001 0 1 100 / Co ! !!"# 0.2 0.4 ! ! ! !! 0.6 10 1 = 0.1 ! !! + ! 1 − !! 10 !!"# ! !!"# Csolid/Co 0.5 ! 0.8 1 10 !! =1 ! !! + ! 1 − !! 5 1 0.5 0.1 1 1 0.01 10 0.2 0.1 0.01 5 0.1 0 = 1−! Solid 0.01 ! !!"# !!"# 100 Aggregate Melt !!"#$ 0.1 0.01 0.01 0.001 0 1 1 0.4 F 0.6 F FIGURE 7.4. Fractional Melting 0.8 1 0.001 0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 F 100 Aggregate Melt 0.01 1 0.001 0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 0.001 0 1 ESCI 430 100 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 C-T Lee 100 Solid Aggregate Melt 10 0.01 10 0.1 Csolid!/C !"#o = Equilibrium Melting 0.1 0.1 0.01 0.5 0.01 1 10 0.1 0 C-T Lee 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 0.001 0 1 100 0.1 F Fractional 1 0.2 5 0.4 0 100 FIGURE 7.4. Fractional Melting C melt!/!"#Co 0.4 10 5 1 1 0.5 5 0.1 0 5 100 1 0.1 10 0.1 10 0 0.8 Solids 1 0.1 0.6 !0.5! = ! ! Csolid !!"#/Co !1!1 + ! 1 − !! 1 0.1 = ! !!0.5+ ! 1 − !! 1 Equilibrium Aggregate Melt 0.2 10 D=0.01 1 0.8 0.01 100 Melts 0.6 10 Equilibrium Melting 10 Melts 0.5 D=0.01 1 5 ! !!"# 5 1 1 !! ! ! 0.1 C!melt ! + ! 1 − !! !"#/Co !10 1 !"#$ C melt ! /C o = 0.5 ! ! !! + ! 1 − !! !!"# Cmelt/Co !!"#$ 10 100 1 1 0.01 0.2 0.4 F 0.6 0.8 1 0 0.1 10 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.2 F 0.4 0.6 F 0.8 1 0.8 1 0.01 F Melting. FIGURE 7.3. Equilibrium h rule was added more recently by Ringwood: ion with the most similar electronegativity to that of the major ment being replaced will be favored because it destabilizes the tal lattice the least. Trace element partitioning evidence for differentiation of the Earth GG325 L36, F2013 Radiogenic,StronOum,Isotope,(87Sr/86Sr),System, Evolution of 87Sr/86Sr in Earth’s geological reservoirs DRb (olivine) = ~0.003 element partitioning example DRb (pyroxene) = ~0.002 0.72 agram shows contours of the clinopyroxene-melt ution (partition) coefficient=for~0.0005 various ions as a function DRb (garnet) rge and radius (i.e., primarily rules #1 and #2). Rb 140 K Ba 120 Sr 100 Oceanic Crust Highe Ca 80 60 40 Pb La Th Y REE Lu Mn U V Fe Hf Li Co Sc Mg Zr Ni 0.2 Ga 0.5 >1 Cr 0.1 Ti 0.01 P Be 3 1 2 4 Ionic Charge Continetal Crust 87Sr/86Sr 160 Highe 0 Ta , N b 5 0.70 Low R Bulk Earth Depleted Earth’s Mantle 6 Figure 7.10. Ionic radius (picometers) vs. ionic charge contoured for clinopyroxene/liquid partition coefficients. Cations normally present in clinopyroxene are Ca2+, Mg2+, and Fe2+, shown by symbols. Elements whose charge and ionic radius most closely match that of the major elements have the highest partition coefficients. modified from White, Geochemistry 4.5 Billion yrs GG325 L36, F2013 Time Present Primitive mantle- normalized 1000 Melts and crust normalized to primitive mantle Cont. Crust 100 10 1 Plume MORB 0.1 0.01 Cs Rb Ba Th U Nb La Ce Pr Sr Nd Zr Hf Sm Gd Tb Dy Ho Y Er Yb Lu FIGURE 7.7. Trace-element abundances of continental crust, mid-ocean ridge basalt (MORB) and a plume basalt normalized to primitive mantle. The second reason for normalization is that one can learn something about geologic processes that fractionate (i.e. change the relative proportions of trace-elements) trace-element relative abundances from their original relative abundances. For example, Primitive mantle- normalized 1000 Melts and crust normalized to primitive mantle Cont. Crust 100 10 1 Plume MORB 0.1 0.01 Cs Rb Ba Th U Nb La Ce Pr Sr Nd Zr Hf Sm Gd Tb Dy Ho Y Er Yb Lu FIGURE 7.7. Trace-element abundances of continental crust, mid-ocean ridge basalt (MORB) and a plume basalt normalized to primitive mantle. The second reason for normalization is that one can learn something about geologic processes that fractionate (i.e. change the relative proportions of trace-elements) trace-element relative abundances from their original relative abundances. For example, Primitive mantle- normalized 1000 Melts and crust normalized to primitive mantle Cont. Crust 100 10 1 Plume MORB 0.1 0.01 Cs Rb Ba Th U Nb La Ce Pr Sr Nd Zr Hf Sm Gd Tb Dy Ho Y Er Yb Lu FIGURE 7.7. Trace-element abundances of continental crust, mid-ocean ridge basalt (MORB) and a plume basalt normalized to primitive mantle. The second reason for normalization is that one can learn something about geologic processes that fractionate (i.e. change the relative proportions of trace-elements) trace-element relative abundances from their original relative abundances. For example, Reading for next class y that other can similarly iciently high We have also ace of Cu for ater-gas shift as a result of for this type f the working Supplementary Text Figs. S1 to S8 Tables S1 to S3 References (33–41) 16 November 2015; accepted 14 December 2015 10.1126/science.aad8868 OCEANOGRAPHY Enhanced East Pacific Rise hydrothermal activity during the last two glacial terminations D. C. Lund,1* P. D. Asimow,2 K. A. Farley,2 T. O. Rooney,3 E. Seeley,1 E. W. Jackson,4 Z. M. Durham4 Mid-ocean ridge magmatism is driven by seafloor spreading and decompression melting of the upper mantle. Melt production is apparently modulated by glacial-interglacial changes in sea level, raising the possibility that magmatic flux acts as a negative feedback on ice-sheet size. The timing of melt variability is poorly constrained, however, precluding a clear link between ridge magmatism and Pleistocene climate transitions. Here we present well-dated sedimentary records from the East Pacific Rise that show evidence of enhanced hydrothermal activity during the last two glacial terminations. We suggest that glacial maxima and lowering of sea level caused anomalous melting in the upper mantle and that the subsequent magmatic anomalies promoted deglaciation through the release of mantle heat and carbon at mid-ocean ridges. ea level–driven pressure variations due to the growth and decay of ice sheets likely ridge bathymetry reveal Milankovitch-scale frequencies in abyssal-hill spacing, consistent with Downloaded from http://science.sciencemag.org/ on Septe lyzes. Water ace at room it dissocia(110) surface was pumped hat the Cu atomic resely because orbed on the presence of overed surng water, as eak in both hown in Fig. in Fig. 3C. t the O peak tion of H2O ppears after se clustering O pressures was also obmixtures, as ) surface, on O, is inactive 25. J. Lagoute, X. Liu, S. Fölsch, Phys. Rev. Lett. 95, 136801 (2005). 26. O. V. Lysenko, V. S. Stepanyuk, W. Hergert, J. Kirschner, Phys. Rev. Lett. 89, 126102 (2002). 27. M. Mehlhorn, H. Gawronski, K. Morgenstern, Phys. Rev. Lett. 104, 076101 (2010).